Charles, chevalier d'Éon de Beaumont

Charles, chevalier d’Éon de Beaumont, (born Oct. 5, 1728, Tonnerre, Fr.—died May 21, 1810, London), French secret agent from whose name the term “eonism,” denoting the tendency to adopt the costume and manners of the opposite sex, is derived.

His first mission was to the Russian empress Elizabeth in 1755, on which he seems to have disguised himself as a woman. After good service as a dragoon captain, he went to London in 1762, with the Duc de Nivernais (Louis Jules Mancini). On returning to Versailles with the Treaty of Paris ratified (1763), he received the cross of St. Louis. Sent back to London with secret instructions from the King for espionage, he became involved in a quarrel with the French ambassador but refused to return to France—afterward claiming that Louis XV had instructed him to redisguise himself as a woman and to hide in the city.

Speculation began in London as to the Chevalier’s sex. Eventually, in need of money, he pretended to Beaumarchais in 1775 that he was really a woman. Believing this, Beaumarchais managed to get him a pension, but Éon was ordered to return to France wearing women’s dress. In 1777 he received the command; “By order of the king: Charles-Geneviève-Louise-Auguste-Andrée-Timothée d’Éon de Beaumont is commanded to leave off the dragoon’s uniform which she is wearing, and to dress according to her sex.” Thenceforth he always wore women’s dress. Having returned to London in 1785, he died there 25 years later. An autopsy performed two days after his death certified him male.